Nearly 20 percent of Rubio’s delegates (34 of the 172, to be exact) will be free to vote for whichever candidate they choose right away, the report says. State rules in Oklahoma, Minnesota, and Louisianna say that if a candidate is not on the ballot, their delegates can vote for anyone who is. Oklahoma’s GOP Chair Pam Pollard said to NBC News about Rubio that “if he is not on the ballot — those 12 delegates are free to vote whatever way they want.”
Making things even more complicated, most of Rubio’s delegates haven’t even been appointed yet. In Minnesota, Cruz supporters are running for the positions, essentially adding to Cruz’s delegate total before the convention even starts.
Rubio has made it clear that the remaining 138 delegates should stick with him, saying as recently as Tuesday on a radio show that “I want to make sure that they’re there on the first ballot.” Some states are requiring it whether Rubio wants it or not. Virginia’s rules say that delegates are bound to their candidate on the first ballot of the convention no matter what. State GOP spokesperson David D’Onofrio told NBC News, “Even if he stood up and said, ‘All of my people should vote for x,’ in Virginia, they are bound to him on the first ballot.”
Tennessee GOP chairman Ryan Haynes said his state is even more restrictive, binding delegates for the first two ballots, “even if his campaign is suspended.”
[h/t NBC News, Screengrab via CNN]